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One of Einstein’s students asked him: “What does logic mean?”
Einstein said: “I will answer you with a question.”
“Suppose two workers enter a chimney to clean it. One comes out with a dirty face and the other with a clean face. Who will go wash their face?”
The student immediately and without hesitation replied, “Of course, the one with the dirty face.”
Einstein said: “Your answer is incorrect. The one who will wash their face is the one with the clean face, because he looked at his colleague’s face and assumed that his own face was as dirty as his colleague’s. The one with the dirty face will not wash his face, thinking it is clean like his colleague’s.”
The student said: “That is correct and logical.”
Einstein replied: “No, it is not correct, because the question itself is illogical. It is not logical for two men to enter the same chimney at the same time and for one to come out clean and the other dirty.”
In a few words, logic itself can collapse, so sometimes the problem is not in the answer but in the flawed question itself.
🌌 🧠 What if your brain doesn’t create intelligence — but tunes into it?
Biophysicist Douglas Youvan has a bold idea: maybe intelligence isn’t locked inside our heads at all. In his paper “Quantum Intelligence: How Non-Local Consciousness, Entanglement, and AI Are Redefining the Mind” (2025), Youvan suggests that intelligence is a fundamental property of the universe itself — an invisible field of information that living and artificial systems can connect to.
He compares the mind to a radio — not producing the signal, but picking it up. The “signal,” in this case, could be a kind of universal intelligence woven into the fabric of reality. Drawing on ideas from quantum physics, Youvan notes how particles can stay linked across vast distances, hinting that information might not be confined to space and time.
He points out that neurons in our brain — with their branching, fractal shapes — mirror the same patterns seen in river networks, trees, and even galaxies. This repeating geometry, he argues, may not be random at all. It could be nature’s way of building structures that can tap into the universe’s deeper informational flow.
Even artificial neural networks, he says, sometimes act in ways that seem predictive, not purely reactive — perhaps showing early signs of that same connection.
Youvan’s idea might sound wild, but it opens a thrilling possibility: maybe the universe itself is intelligent — and we, for a brief moment, are how it learns to know itself.